Religious Civilizations Interacting: Korea, Japan, and Vietnam, 550–1500 CE
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School of Buddhism in which adherents follow an experienced master and seek to achieve satori, a flash of enlightenment signaling the recovery of one's Buddha nature.

Korean phonetic script, introduced in the middle of the fifteenth century.

The government, rule, or office of a shogun.

A very small blade made of flaked stone and used as a tool, especially in the Mesolithic era.

Having thin lines or bands.

Japan's indigenous religion, which emphasizes reverence for nature and the importance of "vitality".

A social system in which the mother is head of the family.

Amount negotiated between the family of the groom and the family of the bride to be paid by the former to the latter in some marriage traditions, as compensation for the loss of her labor.

A system of written symbols representing the sounds of syllables, rather than individual consonants and vowels.

Relating to, based on, or tracing ancestral descent through the maternal line.

A Japanese warrior who was a member of the feudal military aristocracy.

Traditional alcoholic drink brewed from rice.

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